Foreign banks and the London money market during the first globalisation

This study examines the relationship between the London Money Market (LMM) and the credit provision of non-British overseas banks during the first wave of globalisation. Using monthly data between 1889 and 1913, we find a positive relationship between the amount of credit authorised by the German Br...

Olles dieđut

Bibliográfalaš dieđut
Váldodahkkit: Kisling, W, Molteni, M
Materiálatiipa: Working paper
Giella:English
Almmustuhtton: University of Oxford 2023
_version_ 1826310890028269568
author Kisling, W
Molteni, M
author_facet Kisling, W
Molteni, M
author_sort Kisling, W
collection OXFORD
description This study examines the relationship between the London Money Market (LMM) and the credit provision of non-British overseas banks during the first wave of globalisation. Using monthly data between 1889 and 1913, we find a positive relationship between the amount of credit authorised by the German Brasilianische Bank für Deutschland in Brazil and the spread between the London market and floating rate. Our results suggest that an increase in demand for foreign bills and/or a decrease in borrowing costs in the LMM leads to an increase in credit supply. We use the impact of annual tax payments on the spread between market and floating rate as an instrumental variable (IV) to show that this relationship is causal. Although there is a significant amount of literature on London's historic role as a global financial centre and a growing number of studies on foreign banking history, little quantitative evidence is available about the connection between the two. This study bridges this gap.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:58:43Z
format Working paper
id oxford-uuid:365c2081-da0f-46fb-a036-c09adb8cf92a
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:58:43Z
publishDate 2023
publisher University of Oxford
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:365c2081-da0f-46fb-a036-c09adb8cf92a2023-09-13T15:46:18ZForeign banks and the London money market during the first globalisationWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:365c2081-da0f-46fb-a036-c09adb8cf92aEnglishSymplectic ElementsUniversity of Oxford2023Kisling, WMolteni, MThis study examines the relationship between the London Money Market (LMM) and the credit provision of non-British overseas banks during the first wave of globalisation. Using monthly data between 1889 and 1913, we find a positive relationship between the amount of credit authorised by the German Brasilianische Bank für Deutschland in Brazil and the spread between the London market and floating rate. Our results suggest that an increase in demand for foreign bills and/or a decrease in borrowing costs in the LMM leads to an increase in credit supply. We use the impact of annual tax payments on the spread between market and floating rate as an instrumental variable (IV) to show that this relationship is causal. Although there is a significant amount of literature on London's historic role as a global financial centre and a growing number of studies on foreign banking history, little quantitative evidence is available about the connection between the two. This study bridges this gap.
spellingShingle Kisling, W
Molteni, M
Foreign banks and the London money market during the first globalisation
title Foreign banks and the London money market during the first globalisation
title_full Foreign banks and the London money market during the first globalisation
title_fullStr Foreign banks and the London money market during the first globalisation
title_full_unstemmed Foreign banks and the London money market during the first globalisation
title_short Foreign banks and the London money market during the first globalisation
title_sort foreign banks and the london money market during the first globalisation
work_keys_str_mv AT kislingw foreignbanksandthelondonmoneymarketduringthefirstglobalisation
AT moltenim foreignbanksandthelondonmoneymarketduringthefirstglobalisation